Business groups in the US have sharply criticised the Supreme Court of India judgment against Swiss drugmaker Novartis in denying patent protection to the company’s anti-cancer drug Glivec.
They maintain Monday’s ruling will hurt the sector’s innovation in India, but industry observers describe their response as a bluff that can be called.
Disappointed with the verdict, John Castellani, president and CEO of PhRMA, a leading pharmaceutical industry association based in Washington, DC, said in a statement the ruling marked “yet another example of the deteriorating innovation environment in India”.
Describing the protection of intellectual property rights as fundamental to the discovery of medicines, he said, “It is critically important that India promote a policy environment that supports continued R&D of new medicines for the health of patients in India and worldwide.”
The US-India Business Council said over 40 countries, including China and Russia had granted a patent for Glivec and that India now stood out as unique for not granting the same to this “incremental innovation”.
USIBC President Ron Somers said, “We recognise the importance of generics to the contribution of health once patents expire, but believe that in order for India to become the innovation nation of the 21st century, it should reward and encourage innovation, including incremental innovation.”
However, pharma sector observers say India is nowhere close to becoming an innovation powerhouse in this sector in the near future, and therefore the ruling is likely to help, not hurt, the Indian pharmaceutical industry for now.
Raghuram Selvaraju, managing director and head of Healthcare Equity Research at the New York-based Aegis Capital Corporation, said India’s homegrown pharma companies have not yet been as successful in developing new drugs as they have in copying other companies’ drugs.
“The Indian Supreme Court rendered this decision on behalf of the Indian people,” Selvaraju said, adding the court could step up to protect patents when required.
“I think what is much more likely to happen is obviously that the Indian Supreme Court, as and when innovation truly starts to be practiced by Indian pharma companies, will engage in a little bit of two-facedness of its own and say ‘Yes, we know there was this prior decision that was rendered against Novartis, but that does not mean all Indian pharma patents cannot be upheld, only the ones where there’s a clear humanitarian issue at stake’.”
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